Yes. The first one, Antonio Trejo Cabrera, was a lawyer for the MARCA, a group of campesinos in the Aguán Valley who had been pursuing an exclusively legal strategy. They were trying to reclaim land that had been illegally seized by Miguel Facussé, the richest and most powerful man in the country. In late May—I think May 30 of last year—they got the first legal decision in their favour to restore the land that had been illegally taken by Miguel Facussé. All summer, Antonia Trejo received death threats. He publicly said that if he were killed, Miguel Facussé would be responsible. He was assassinated in September in front of a church where he had just officiated at a wedding.
To be the best of my knowledge, nothing has gone forward in terms of prosecuting or charging or arresting anybody in the case of Antonio Trejo.
The other case, I am not as familiar with. There were newspaper stories in the next few days of people who had been supposedly arrested. I haven't seen anything since about any of those cases going forward. I think if they were going forward, it would have been in the news. I do follow the Honduran papers every day.
So we're seeing this pattern here of impunity, of politically motivated killings. I haven't talked about this, but there have been continuing assassinations and death threats and attacks against journalists and lawyers. The head of the association of independent television and radio stations was physically attacked just a few days ago for opposing a new law that would restrict media freedom.